Guide · Branding

Brand Refresh vs. Rebrand: Which Do You Need?

At some point most businesses look at their brand and wonder if it's time for a change. The hard part is knowing how big that change should be. A small evolution, or a clean start?


Getting this wrong is expensive in both directions: a full rebrand when you only needed a refresh wastes money and recognition, while a light touch-up when you needed a rebrand leaves the real problem unsolved. This guide explains the difference, the signals that point to each, and ends with a quick scorecard you can use to gauge where you stand.

Refresh vs. rebrand: what's the difference?

The two get used interchangeably, but they're very different in scope.

A brand refresh evolves what you already have. The logo, colours, and typography are modernised and tightened, but the brand stays recognisable. Customers still know it's you; it just looks sharper and more current. It's the equivalent of a renovation.

A rebrand is a fundamental change. It can involve a new name, a new logo, new positioning, and a new visual identity built from the ground up. Recognition is intentionally reset. It's less a renovation and more a rebuild, and it's the right call only when the business has changed enough to justify it.

When a refresh is enough

A refresh is usually the answer when the foundation is sound but the execution has aged. Typical signs:

  • Your logo and visuals look dated, but the brand still fits who you are.
  • Your materials have drifted out of consistency over time.
  • You want to look more premium or current without confusing existing customers.
  • You're entering a new channel, such as a website or social media, and need the brand to stretch further.

A refresh keeps the equity you've built while bringing the look up to date.

When you need a full rebrand

A rebrand is justified when the brand no longer matches the business. Typical triggers:

  • Your company has fundamentally changed: new direction, new market, or new audience.
  • There's been a merger, acquisition, or name change.
  • Your current brand actively works against you, or carries associations you need to leave behind.
  • You've outgrown a name or identity that no longer reflects your ambition.

A rebrand is a bigger investment and a bigger risk, which is exactly why it should be reserved for when the situation genuinely calls for it.

Do you need a rebrand? Score yourself

Tick each statement that's true for your business. The more that apply, the bigger the change you likely need. Your score and recommendation update as you go.

0 of 9 signs apply

Your brand is probably holding up well. Keep monitoring, but there's no urgent need to change.

As a guide: 0 to 2 signs means your brand is likely in good shape; 3 to 5 suggests a refresh is worth considering; 6 or more points toward a full rebrand.

What each one involves

A refresh typically touches the logo, colour palette, typography, and brand guidelines, then rolls those updates across your key materials. A rebrand usually starts further back, with positioning and strategy, before rebuilding the identity and applying it everywhere.

In practice both map onto the same branding tiers: a refresh often sits around a logo-and-guidelines level, while a full rebrand lines up with a complete identity system. Knowing which you need makes scoping and budgeting far easier.

Common mistakes

  • Rebranding when a refresh would do. Throwing away recognition you've spent years building is costly. Change only as much as you need to.
  • Refreshing when the real problem is deeper. A new coat of paint on a brand that no longer fits just delays the harder decision.
  • Chasing trends. Redesigning to follow every visual fad leads to a brand that needs redoing again soon. Aim for current but durable.
  • Skipping the strategy. Especially in a rebrand, changing the visuals without revisiting positioning is a missed opportunity.
  • Dropping consistency afterwards. A refresh or rebrand only holds if it's applied consistently, which is what brand guidelines are for.

Frequently asked questions

How often should a business rebrand?

There's no fixed schedule. Many brands refresh every handful of years to stay current and rebrand only when something fundamental changes. Rebranding too frequently erodes recognition.

Will I lose brand recognition if I change my brand?

A refresh is designed to keep recognition while modernising. A rebrand intentionally resets it, which is fine when the business has changed, but it's a real consideration when you have existing equity to protect.

Is a brand refresh cheaper than a rebrand?

Usually, yes. A refresh is narrower in scope, while a rebrand often includes strategy and a full identity system. Our guide on how much branding costs breaks down the levels.

How long does a rebrand take?

It varies with scope. A refresh is faster because it builds on what exists; a full rebrand takes longer because it often starts with strategy and rebuilds the identity from there.

Not sure whether you need a refresh or a rebrand?

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